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Technical Paper

An Approach to Model a Traffic Environment by Addressing Sparsity in Vehicle Count Data

2023-04-11
2023-01-0854
For realistic traffic modeling, real-world traffic calibration data is needed. These data include a representative road network, road users count by type, traffic lights information, infrastructure, etc. In most cases, this data is not readily available due to cost, time, and confidentiality constraints. Some open-source data are accessible and provide this information for specific geographical locations, however, it is often insufficient for realistic calibration. Moreover, the publicly available data may have errors, for example, the Open Street Maps (OSM) does not always correlate with physical roads. The scarcity, incompleteness, and inaccuracies of the data pose challenges to the realistic calibration of traffic models. Hence, in this study, we propose an approach based on spatial interpolation for addressing sparsity in vehicle count data that can augment existing data to make traffic model calibrations more accurate.
Technical Paper

Model Order Reduction for x-In the Loop (xIL) Simulation of Automotive Transmissions

2019-04-02
2019-01-1042
Increasing complexity of automotive systems along with growing safety and performance requirements, is causing development cycle costs to swell. A common solution is to use a Model-Based Design (MBD) approach, particularly using x-In the Loop (xIL) simulation methods for Validation and Verification (V&V). MBD allows efficient workflow from offline control design using high-fidelity models to real time V&V using Hardware-in-the-Loop (HIL) simulations. It is very challenging to reduce the complex non-linear high-fidelity models to real-time capable models for HIL simulation. Current literature does not provide a standard approach for obtaining the HIL-capable reduced model for complex non-linear systems. In this paper we present an approach to perform model reduction in light of HIL-level requirements. The approach is presented using an example of a 10-speed automatic transmission. The system constitutes three subsystems - the hydraulic network, mechanical gearbox, and torque converter.
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